News Now They Have Gone Too Far

What a story....a secret serum likely saved the Americans, bypassing every compassionate use standard (understandably) in place. So why did we not provide it before to use on a select few Africans? Cost? Fear of protecting pharmacy profits? I am curious.

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I suspect that the serum is proprietary, expensive, and experimental. Until it passes clinical trials and is patented, drug companies don't want to risk giving it away to competitors. And governments don't want to be accused of experimenting on foreign patients with untested drugs. Many powerful serums are deadly toxic at the wrong dosage or in the presence of other factors. Big lawsuits could result. I think these knowledgable medical professionals signed a lot of exculpatory documents before being allowed the medicine as a special exception.

I don't know broseph. By pure population, CA ranks right near the top for cumulative numbers in some diseases. But look at lil ol Luzianna.....

"Louisiana ranked 11th highest among the 50 states in cumulative reported AIDS cases."
"Louisiana ranked 1st among 50 states, with 16.5 cases of P&S syphilis per 100,000 persons"
"Ranked 5th among 50 states in chlamydial infections (527.8 per 100,000 persons) and ranked 2nd among 50 states in
gonorrheal infections (220.2 per 100,000 persons)"

Double wrap it fellas.

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But those stats are very mislead8ng cause me and shane account for several of those and the6 double count us.

I suspect that the serum is proprietary, expensive, and experimental. Until it passes clinical trials and is patented, drug companies don't want to risk giving it away to competitors. And governments don't want to be accused of experimenting on foreign patients with untested drugs. Many powerful serums are deadly toxic at the wrong dosage or in the presence of other factors. Big lawsuits could result. I think these knowledgable medical professionals signed a lot of exculpatory documents before being allowed the medicine as a special exception.

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If you all bothered to read the articles you would have learned that as Red noted:
1) It was experimental and had not been tested on humans.
2) Both patients signed waivers holding the drug company harmless.
3) It is a monoclonal derivative of 3 pieces of live Ebola virus
4) It had not been tested for toxicity on humans because there are not enough patients anywhere to make a suitable sample
5) It is being developed under the orphan drug law and research is being done as part of defense against bio war.

If you all bothered to read the articles you would have learned that as Red noted:
1) It was experimental and had not been tested on humans.
2) Both patients signed waivers holding the drug company harmless.
3) It is a monoclonal derivative of 3 pieces of live Ebola virus
4) It had not been tested for toxicity on humans because there are not enough patients anywhere to make a suitable sample
5) It is being developed under the orphan drug law and research is being done as part of defense against bio war.

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Really? If I had "bothered" to read? Do I strike you as a non-reader? Au contraire. Of course I have read quite a bit the last few months on this latest outbreak. And naturally I read all the things you listed. And yet none of those really satisfies my curiosity because I make it a point to question whatever "company line" the government puts out. I believe there is a lot more than just "we're still testing" going on and it's not necessarily altruistic.

They've also both got large, poor minority populations. Plus if San Francisco is gay Mecca, then New Orleans is gay Medina. The demographics of STDs are interesting.

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Significant numbers of those poor minority populations have other cultural factors that allow for the spread of STD's including HIV/AIDS. Traditional "macho" roles among men create a stigma for gay men and so despite being in hetero relationships they continue to have sex with other men. They also don't want to obtain healthcare for what may be perceived as gay-related illnesses. Hispanics may not obtain health status updates because they are here illegally and/or don't speak English.

And yet none of those really satisfies my curiosity because I make it a point to question whatever "company line" the government puts out. I believe there is a lot more than just "we're still testing" going on and it's not necessarily altruistic.

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Why do you always assume that the government is lying, misleading, and covering something up? Is there evidence of this? What motivation is there for the government to lie? Ebola is a new and rare disease. Is it surprising to you that we aren't that far along in finding medicines for it?

Why do you always assume that the government is lying, misleading, and covering something up? Is there evidence of this? What motivation is there for the government to lie? Ebola is a new and rare disease. Is it surprising to you that we aren't that far along in finding medicines for it?

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For me, it's not an assumption. However, does a lack of evidence mean it isn't true or just that you haven't seen it? Prior to this outbreak, who knew about the serum, outside of a select few?

Ebola, from an identified perspective is barely older than HIV. I suspect funding will increase exponentially when it is contracted on American soil.